Champagne sparklers and a fast-spreading inferno: How a deadly Swiss bar tragedy unfolded

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By Kara Fox, Thomas Bordeaux, Lou Robinson, CNN

(CNN) — As young partygoers rang in the New Year at a packed bar in the Swiss Alps, the celebrating quickly turned into a nightmare when a devastating fire tore through the basement, killing at least 40 people and injuring 119 others.

The blaze at Le Constellation in Crans-Montana has been described by Switzerland’s president as one of the country’s “worst tragedies.” As families anxiously await word about missing loved ones and experts work to identify the victims, authorities are still piecing together how the fire started and why it spread so fast.

Swiss authorities said Friday that the champagne sparklers were the likely cause of the fire, though the official inquiry remains ongoing. Emerging videos and eyewitness accounts reveal a deadly combination of hazards: fire-prone ceiling paneling and a crowded bar packed with young patrons funneling toward a narrow escape route.

A night of revelry

Le Constellation, located in the heart of Crans-Montana, a luxury sky resort in the French and German-speaking canton of Valais, is a popular nightspot among young locals and visitors.

Around 200 people were inside the venue on New Year’s Eve, according to eyewitnesses, ready to celebrate 2026 with music, drinks and dancing.

Sparkles that turned to smoke

Imagery widely shared online show staff in motorcycle helmets perched on others’ shoulders, holding champagne bottles with sparklers amid the packed crowd.

One clip shows at least six bottles raised in the air as flames and smoke erupt from the ceiling.

The sparklers appear to have ignited what experts believe is acoustic paneling on the ceiling, a material designed to improve sound but that can also be highly flammable.

Independent fire consultant Stephen MacKenzie described it as “plastic petrol,” adding: “That’s why we’re seeing reports of many of the young people with a first, second, third and unfortunately, fourth degree burns.”

Swiss chief prosecutor Beatrice Pilloud told reporters on Friday that investigators are looking into the installation of foam paneling at the bar, and if it complied with regulations.

A fast-spreading fire

Once the fire broke out, it spread quickly.

One video shows a young man attempting to put the fire out by hitting it with a cloth, while others record on their phones or continue dancing, seemingly unaware of the imminent danger.

“Once the ceiling was on fire, within about 10 seconds the entire nightclub was on fire,” one witness said.

Horrific escape

As smoke filled the lounge and the fire blazed, partygoers rushed toward a narrow staircase.

Video verified by CNN shows dozens trapped at the exit, with one person jumping through a window as thick, red smoke engulfed the building.

MacKenzie explained the fire’s rapid spread through a process called a flashover, in which nearly everything in a room ignites almost simultaneously.

“Combustions pick up at ceiling level,” causing the fire to “spread laterally,” he said. This process is like a “stone drop in an ocean,” with smoke rippling out sideways and starting to “preheat” everything in front of it.

When the fire door was opened it could have created a “chimney effect” which accelerated the flow of smoke and combustible gases upward, MacKenzie said. “The smoke is actually on fire – a ‘flashover,’” he added.

On Friday afternoon Pilloud, the Swiss prosecutor, said all signs supported that theory: “As things stand, everything points to the fire starting from sparklers or flares placed in champagne bottles that came too close to the ceiling, which very rapidly led to a flashover fire.”

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Santa Maria man arrested after fight and shooting on East Bunny Avenue Thursday evening

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SANTA MARIA, Calif. (KEYT) – A 31-year-old Santa Maria man is in custody for assault and shooting at a home with people inside after a reported fight on East Bunny Thursday evening.

On Jan. 1, around 6:37 p.m., officers were dispatched to a reported fight that may have involved a shooting in the 100 block of East Bunny Avenue stated a press release Friday from the Santa Maria Police Department.

Officers spoke with the person who called about the fight and they learned that they saw two people fighting and later heard the sound of glass breaking followed by the sound of gunshots detailed the Santa Maria Police Department.

According to Santa Maria Police, a search of the area resulted in the discovery of two shattered windows at an apartment in the 100 block of East Bunny Avenue and after officers heard the sounds of children crying inside, they forced their way into the home.

Officers conducted a sweep and found no one in need of medical attention inside shared the Santa Maria Police Department.

During an investigation of the area, officers found multiple spent shell casings, live ammunition, and a .22-caliber handgun inside of the home noted the Santa Maria Police Department.

As a result of the discovery, a 31-year-old Santa Maria man was arrested and booked into the Northern Branch Jail for assault with a deadly weapon, discharging a firearm in an inhabited dwelling, and other weapons-related charges stated the Santa Maria Police Department.

Santa Maria Police Department shared that at this point in their investigation, they do not believe there are any outstanding suspects connected to the incident and there is no ongoing threat to the public.

The post Santa Maria man arrested after fight and shooting on East Bunny Avenue Thursday evening appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Trump shops for marble for new White House ballroom

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Work continues on the site of the demolished White House East Wing on December 9.

By Adam Cancryn, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump spent his Friday morning perusing samples of stone in Florida for a new White House ballroom, as he pushes ahead on a controversial effort to replace the East Wing.

Before his visit to Trump International Golf Club, the president made a detour to Arc Stone & Tile, a stone importer near Mar-a-Lago that bills itself as an Italian marble specialist, where he planned to buy marble and onyx, according to a White House official.

The purchase, which the official said would be made at Trump’s personal expense, represents the latest sign of the president’s close involvement in a project that would dramatically alter the White House’s footprint — and put Trump’s permanent stamp on the nation’s most famous address.

The planned 90,000-square-foot ballroom, which has ballooned in size and cost since Trump first announced it last summer, has also embroiled the administration in a running court battle.

Trump initially estimated that the construction would cost $200 million and promised that it wouldn’t affect the existing White House structure. Yet a few months later, he opted to bulldoze the entire East Wing with little advance notice, making way for an expanded ballroom that he now estimates will cost up to $400 million in personal expenses and private donations.

“We’re donating a $400 million ballroom,” Trump said in December. “I think I’ll do it for less, but it’s 400. I should do it for less, I will do it for less. But just in case, I say 400.”

Since returning to office, Trump has overseen a range of major changes to the White House, including paving over the Rose Garden, redoing the Palm Room and redecorating the Oval Office. He’s often favored pricey white marble and gold accents, imitating the style found throughout his Mar-a-Lago club, where he’s been spending the past two weeks for the holidays.

But the ballroom is, by far, Trump’s biggest and most disruptive project to date.

The sudden demolition of the iconic East Wing in October prompted public outcry and immediate legal challenges over the administration’s effort to bypass planning commissions that have traditionally reviewed proposed additions to the White House and other government buildings. A judge has since ruled that Trump officials must begin “consultation processes” with the two planning commissions.

Yet Trump has brushed off criticism of his unilateral reshaping of the White House, as well as the extensive time and energy he’s personally devoted to it. The administration is now seeking to rapidly win those official approvals, laying out a timeline that could allow for ballroom construction to begin as early as this spring and finish by mid-2028, prior to the end of Trump’s term.

Trump officials are expected to hold a public information meeting in front of the National Capital Planning Commission on January 8, and then meet with the Commission of Fine Arts the week after that. Those sessions could then clear the way for final presentations to the two boards within the next couple of months.

That’s a far more aggressive timeline compared with past White House projects, which have taken several years to break ground. Planning for a new perimeter fence on the White House grounds that began in 2014,

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